Author Topic: How to increase running endurance?  (Read 1094 times)

How to be able to run more: run more.

How to be able to run more: run more.
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How many days a week should I run? How many miles? What pace? How much should I increase each week? Just trying to get some ideas here from people who run regularly/a lot

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How many days a week should I run? How many miles? What pace? How much should I increase each week? Just trying to get some ideas here from people who run regularly/a lot
7 days a week, start out with 1/4 of a mile on your local track. Remember to also do exercise such as pushups and situps.

I've had the same question ever since I shipped off to bootcamp. In order to graduate you have to pass your PFA, which requires you to run a mile and a half in 15:00 if youre female, or 12:30 if youre male. My first run was 17 minutes because I had to stop and walk, but now that I've been running about 8 miles a week I can do the PFA run in about 12:30 (so I do it better than most of the males) and the 3 mile run in about 30 minutes.

You could always follow the regimen we use here: Two 1.5 mile runs, and one 3 mile run every week. Even after ~3 months of it still hurts to run, but you just have to focus on something besides the pain and just keep your breathing steady and controlled until the pain goes away. If you just keep running the pain will eventually go away, but it'll all come back at once if you stop to walk, which is why I felt like crying at the end of the bootcamp PFA. xD

it takes you 25 minutes to run 3 miles?

in 25 minutes i could walk 3 miles if i took a break in the middle.

what the forget? no you cant, just that statement alone p much proves you've never run 3 miles in your life. We have guys here that can run the 1.5 mile run in 8 minutes but they still end up taking about ~23 minutes to do the 3 mile run and theyre atheletic as forget.

The key to endurance is just to keep pushing your body to its limits, to keep your body working and let it understand that you can run a lot more than you think. Breathing is key and so is stretching to prevent cramps

If I were you I would at least run 1-3 miles a day and do roadruns. Also, try to keep track of how fast you can run 3 miles as you try to shave down. I suggest at first you try running 3 1mile runs separately and timing each and taking breaks, them 2 1.5s, then a 3 and work from there. The number one thing is to keep a routine and follow it. Once you stop running your body will stop working as hard to keep building up your endurance.


In the end as long as you try your best you will be able to reach that 25 mile mark


You could always follow the regimen we use here: Two 1.5 mile runs, and one 3 mile run every week.
[/quote]thanks I think this would be a good place to start for me
maybe ill do a day of speedwork too
The key to endurance is just to keep pushing your body to its limits, to keep your body working and let it understand that you can run a lot more than you think. Breathing is key and so is stretching to prevent cramps

If I were you I would at least run 1-3 miles a day and do roadruns. Also, try to keep track of how fast you can run 3 miles as you try to shave down. I suggest at first you try running 3 1mile runs separately and timing each and taking breaks, them 2 1.5s, then a 3 and work from there. The number one thing is to keep a routine and follow it. Once you stop running your body will stop working as hard to keep building up your endurance.


In the end as long as you try your best you will be able to reach that 25 mile mark
thanks

I participated in sports when I was younger. I was in excellent shape and felt great. I got older and became an actor, the sports and exercise stuff disappearing for several years. When I turned 17 I decided my life needed to change and that I wanted to become a SEAL. I did the wrong thing for my body type (Endomorph) by doing a lot of weight lifting and eating a lot. I lost fat, but gained a ton of muscle. This was not what I needed. I needed endurance and lung capacity over long runs/swims.

DIET:
This January I cut caffeine completely out of my diet, and as of recently I have stopped eating junk food. WHAT YOU EAT MATTERS. I have started losing weight and looking trim just by diet alone. I am taking an extreme approach to dieting starting on Monday (I'll explain the Monday later). I will be eating almost nothing in order to lose weight faster. THIS IS UNHEALTHY AND I DO NOT RECOMMEND AN ACTIVE TEENAGER LIKE YOURSELF TO DO SO AT ALL. Eat good food.  Make an egg and toast sandwich for breakfast.  Eat some fruit and your daily meat for lunch followed by chocolate milk or a "professional recovery" drink.  Dinner should be small and contain fruit and veggies. Mix and match as needed, just don't over eat and don't under eat.

EXERCISE:
As I said about my exercise picking up, I was doing the wrong thing by heavy weightlifting and no cardio activities. I put on weight (in muscle form) and my endurance sucked. I decided that was not going to work so I have switched over to exclusively cardio with some body weight activities. For cardio I am running 1 mile a day (currently at about an 8 minute mile and improving) and the body weight stuff is all pushups and situps (I am the KING of situps).  Starting on Monday (which is July 1st) I am going to be dedicating several hours of my time to working out a TON and eating less. Something you can do to increase your stamina and endurance is to run sprints for short distances. For instance: run 100 yards, drop and push out 20 pushups and 50 situps, and walk back 100 yards and repeat without a break. Sprints will increase lung capacity without burning you out. Also for distance running, run further than you need to for whatever activity you want to participate in, and get a good time doing that. You will build enough endurance that the lesser distance you will HAVE to go will be easier on your body.

Any sort of weight exercise you do needs to be body weight related.  You will gain muscle too quickly by using machines/ free weights.  If you need lean muscle for running it's not recommended.

HEALTH:
I am flat footed, so I have increased risk of injury to my legs. STRETCH. Do yoga or something to loosen up before running.  It makes a difference, and tight muscles while running suck. Side-stitch is that painful feeling you get in your kidneys when you either haven't drank enough water or aren't breathing properly.  You need to take quality deep breaths to prevent this because once you get side-stitch, it won't go away and your run will dramatically suck worse. It's also good to have proper closing and DECENT RUNNING SHOES.

EXTRAS:
Figure out what body type you are (it's pretty straightforward) and look for workouts related to that body type:


Find a running route from your house that is the distance you need:
http://www.runningmap.com/

Good luck.

Thanks!
My plan is this so far

Monday:
Core/Back exercises (PT)
Upper body calisthenics

Tuesday:
Run
Lower body calisthenics

Wednesday:
Core/Back
Upper body

Thursday:
Run
Lower body calisthenics

Friday:
Core/Back
Upper body

Saturday:
Sprints
Plyometrics

I just have to be careful because my back is killing me atm for some reason
Hardest thing for me is eating healthy :(

Woah what, 3 miles in 25 minutes?

Woah what, 3 miles in 25 minutes?
yea thats an 8:20 miles